by Jacob Jones Greetings all, and welcome back to The Friendly Film Fan! Well, it’s finally that time: time to reveal our Top 10 Movies of 2024. It’s been a long and often uneven journey. We weren’t always able to review everything we liked, but we made a concerted effort to focus on what we loved as much as we possibly could. We also didn’t get to see absolutely everything we’d hoped to get to before the release of this list, but that doesn’t mean we’re done with 2024 movies once this list is public; there’s still a good deal to catch up on, and still a lot of quality cinema left to discover as we charge headlong into 2025. 2024 was a tough year for movies in some respects, with the SAG and WGA strikes affecting much of the intended release slate through the calendar year, forcing studios to delay major projects, films to shift release dates back, then forward, then back again, and generally gutting the summer release slate for tentpole projects, leaving a few films like Longlegs, Inside Out 2, Twisters, and Deadpool & Wolverine to hoist theaters aloft on their own shoulders and keep things moving as best they could (unintentionally allowing studios like A24 to fumble hard with release plans for otherwise immense awards-season undertakings like the botched rollout of Sing Sing). But if anything stays consistent in the big, beautiful world of cinema, it’s that nothing is certain, including the future. As we’re thrust into a new era in U.S. politics, Hollywood seems more poised than ever to become a target of the Trump machine, a machine that hates and fears stories that stand up for, celebrate, and acknowledge all different kinds of people while examining what makes humanity turn on itself in the way it has now and excavating how such vitriol and gleeful evil can propel itself to power. Who knows where movies will be four years from now, if indeed this nightmare is to end at that time? And who knows if movies will even be permitted to exist in the same way? In any case, we had 2024, and hopefully, later down the line, we’ll have those years of movies to look back on too. A few notes before we begin. These are not full reviews of the films included; for those films for which we did full reviews, we will link them next to the titles so as to make them easier to find. Secondly, these are not selections for what we believe are the objective ten “best” films of the year – no one can watch literally every single film released in a calendar year to accurately make that kind of judgement, no matter how objective they attempt to be – but rather a list of our ten favorites overall, ranked according to a blend of overall quality and personal taste. If readers would keep those two things in mind, they might understand why certain films which frequently appear on other Top 10 lists do not make appearances here. And now, it’s time. Here, at last, are our Top 10 Movies of 2024! 10. A Different Man Aaron Schimberg’s black-as-night comedy about self-image and insecurity is one of 2024’s most unconventionally entertaining movie experiences. Featuring Sebastian Stan as a man living with a facial deformity, the film turns after he gets a highly experimental surgery, leading him to look like…well, like Sebastian Stan. The face removing sequence in the film is one of the year’s most immediately memorable and genuinely upsetting moments as the audience is forced to sit with it as though a monster is being created rather than “defeated.” The real kicker comes in with the introduction of Adam Pearson to the film, who (both in the film and in real life) possesses the same facial deformity as Stan’s character, but whose life seems entirely driven by the upside of all he’s still able to do. Schimberg’s script and astute direction allow the film to walk an impossible tightrope, never veering into outright comedy but never letting go of its sense of humor about the whole situation. Stan and Pearson both are excellent in their parts, perfectly pairing off each other as Pearson’s charm only seems to drive Stan’s insecurity and deep-seated need for people to like him no matter what he looks like. The first of a few different A24 films on this list, it’s another in a long line of interesting projects for the studio, and a siren call to anyone unaware of Aaron Schimberg to keep a sharp eye out for whatever he does next. 9. Nosferatu Robert Eggers has become one of the great auteurs in movies, a director with a command of craft and dedication to authenticity in period storytelling not often found even through the storytelling medium’s centuries of existence, so when it was announced that he would direct a remake of the classic Nosferatu story, I stayed my mind’s reflexive disappointment that he wouldn’t be doing something original this time around, and allowed myself to look forward to his take on the material. While I don’t ultimately think it is his best work to date, however (that still belongs to The Lighthouse), it is by far his largest project with the most stunning attention to craft that I’ve seen in a film in quite some time. Eggers is not typically a jump-scare enthusiast, but the one time he utilizes the trick in Nosferatu is unexpectedly terrifying, and the implications of the titular character’s mission are not only gross but deeply uncomfortable. Where the film finds its great strength beyond crafts, though, is in the performances of Lily-Rose Depp and Nicholas Hoult, particularly Depp, whose work in the film should – in any just world – immediately thrust her into the Best Actress conversation. Depp’s performance doesn’t simply underscore the idea of women’s sexual desires in this time period being understood as manifestation of disease but accentuates it with a performance at once attracted to Count Orlok’s power and terrified by that same attraction. And speaking of Orlok, Bill Skarsgård is entirely unrecognizable as the iconic vampire, in both sight and sound. The makeup team did remarkable work, but credit should be given to Skarsgård as well for his terrific voice work. I’m sure there will be thing I notice and re-examine upon the home release of the film, especially in relation to the 1922 original, but for the time being, I can’t think of a better period horror film in recent memory than this. 8. Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat The only documentary to make it onto this Top 10, Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat is a remarkable combination of sound and image to tell a story many of 2024’s films aren’t bold enough to tell in such explicit terms. The film focuses on the political machinations of The film focuses on the 1961 assassination of Congolese civil rights leader Patrice Lumumba and all the political machinations that led to it, including and especially the involvement of the CIA in recruiting Black American musicians to infiltrate Lumumba’s inner circle. While the film itself can be overwhelming at first blush, throwing information at the viewer left and right to the point where one occasionally has to pause and rewind just to re-orient themselves in the narrative (if one even has that ability), the sheer level of editing and archival collecting it must have taken to put the whole thing together could land it on this list by itself. As it happens, it’s also incredibly engaging on a narrative level, and a wildly fascinating look into a seldom-discussed yet critical turning point in world events. 7. The Substance The fact that a hard-genre body horror film from the director of Revenge is openly competing for above-the-line Oscars is an amazing indication of just how far the Academy has come the last several years in its embrace of different kinds of storytelling, and Coralie Fargeat’s fast and furious rage-fest against the beauty standards women are held to as they age is more than worthy of whatever nominations AMPAS gives it come Thursday morning. Demi Moore turns in her best performance to date as Elizabeth Sparkle, able to meaningfully connect her own career having done many parts centering on her own body, and bringing all the fury of having dealt with casting directors, costumers, producers, executives, and gross men in positions of immense power to the fore. Meanwhile, Margaret Qualley ascends to superstardom as Sue, cementing herself as an essential actress to watch in whatever she chooses to do, and playing a perfectly self-involved foil to Elizabeth’s self-loathing. Beyond all of that, though, this is a body horror movie, and the second the viewer thinks they’ve seen a relatively tame effect, the film rachets up the makeup by a thousand, somehow topping itself scene after scene, though never getting more disgusting than Dennis Quaid loudly and messily eating shrimp at a lunch table. The makeup work in this movie is on a whole other level, with its wild third act serving as a both a capstone to the film’s ideas and a hard swerve into genre territory. If Coralie Fargeat is nominated for Best Director, it will be a historic moment for genre horror in movie history. Full Review Here 6. Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga Following up an action movie as perfect and unexpectedly masterful as Mad Max: Fury Road would be an impossible task for any other director, so credit given where credit is due; Furiosa may not be as perfect a film as Fury Road was on the whole, but it’s also aiming for something quite different, an epic revenge odyssey spread across decades which is much more character-focused than plot based. Magnificently directed by George Miller, the film is yet another example of how no one in the world understands the Mad Max universe, or indeed the balls it takes to really do this kind of action filmmaking, quite like he does. At 79 years old, Miller is directing sequences like the War Rig chase and the Bullet Farm escape better than even the most skilled people could at less than half his age, and to witness someone so in command of their craft that a nearly three-hour revenge odyssey remains as engaging as this one does is a privilege it’s a shame more people didn’t opt into when the film was in theaters. Anya-Taylor Joy shines as the film’s titular character, able to communicate so much in her face without speaking a word, but it’s Chris Hemsworth’s Dementus who ends up stealing the show in the actor’s finest performance to date, and the final showdown between the two will go down as one of the best endings in all of action filmmaking. Full Review Here 5. Challengers Between this and at the risk of spoiling our number four selection, there was seldom a better time to be a movie fan than this past spring, especially for those with particular admiration for Tom Holland’s new fiancée. Luca Guadagnino’s steamy sports drama starring Zendaya, Josh O’Connor, and Mike Faist as a trio embroiled in a lust triangle in which tennis plays the central cog on which it all turns is not simply the sexiest movie of the year by far, but also the only one without an outright sex scene in its entire runtime. Guadagnino understands the raw excitement of desire better than just about any director working today, and is able to use his skill to thrill his audience by turning the very idea of love and connection into its own tennis match, culminating the whole thing in what is easily the best ending in movies from the whole past year. Almost everyone in this movie is giving career-best performances, and are directed at the perfect pitch for the story being told as Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross’ best score since The Social Network blares across the speakers. Zendaya and Mike Faist both turn in some of their best work yet as Tashi Duncan and Art Donaldson respectively, but it’s Josh O’Connor’s Patrick Zweig who ends up stealing the show as the devious little shit-heel throwing a wrench into what would otherwise be a normal, healthy relationship dynamic. Between all of that and a crackling script chock-full of great dialogue (“you have a better shot with a handgun in your mouth” is an all-timer) and fully realized characters, it’s no wonder Challengers was easily one of the best movie theater experiences of 2024. If only the Academy felt the same way. Full Review Here 4. Dune: Part Two I’m already planning to crash out if the Academy refuses to recognize Denis Villeneuve’s efforts in directing once again, and the growing likelihood of Villeneuve being passed over – despite making an even better movie than he did with the first Dune – in favor of someone like Jacques Audiard makes it all the more infuriating that AMPAS wouldn’t consider Dune: Part Two one of year’s greatest directorial acheivements; after all, it’s not like some of them haven’t seen the movie or finished it, right?...Right?! In any case, Villeneuve’s second half adaptation of Frank Herbert’s beloved sci-fi novel (which I’m currently reading) is a masterful step up from where Part One left off, increasing the world-building, the story stakes, the character depth, and the level of artistry to such a degree that the film joins the conversation easily as one of the greatest sci-fi movies ever made. Villeneuve’s understanding of the source material is second to none, and there are more than a few action sequences in this film that made my jaw drop in the theater for how masterfully they were handled. But it’s not only the sound, the VFX, the costuming, the makeup, the editing, the cinematography, and Hans Zimmer’s new score that are improved upon from the last film; the expansions made to Chani's character in adapting the book only serve to further enhance the compelling story, which acts as a warning against the idea of charismatic leaders who would sooner burn the world down than bypass a chance at revenge (now where have we encountered that before?). The entire ensemble is giving it everything they’ve got, including and especially Timothée Chalamet and Rebecca Ferguson, who turn in even better performances here with more interesting stuff to do, but no one outsteps Austin Butler’s magnificent introduction as Feyd-Rautha Harkonnen, and once he’s on screen, almost every actor finds it difficult to match his freak no matter how good they are, try as Javier Bardem’s deceptively funny Stilgar might. To say much more would be spoiling the film for those who haven’t caught up to it somehow despite its $714 million gross at the box office, but in the shortest terms I can think to put it in, this is essential viewing for all sci-fi, movie, and Denis Villeneuve fans. 3. I Saw the TV Glow Now more than ever, it’s important that trans kids and trans people are seen, heard, and loved by those around them, and the first step in making sure all of those things happen is by recognizing the dysphoria that comes with questioning one’s sexual identity as a queer person in an environment where such things are frowned upon. Jane Schoenbrun’s masterful excavation of that dysphoria is what gives I Saw the TV Glow its power, especially as it relates to trans youth, as we’re shown what burying ourselves out of fear ultimately leads to. The ending of the film in the “Fun Zone” is one of the year’s most outright heartbreaking, shattering with intention the idea that one can truly live not being their full selves without ultimately suffocating themselves in the process. Justice Smith and Brigette Lundy-Paine are fantastic in this gorgeous-looking film with frames that will stop your heart, and while I wouldn’t necessarily call it an especially “scary” watch in the traditional or even indie sense, it belongs every bit to the horror genre for the queer community as The Substance or Nosferatu would for those outside of it. Looking at the whole of movies in 2024, there’s still nothing out there quite like this, and I hope sincerely that every person struggling with their sexual or gender identities gets a chance to see this film and feel as though they are not only understood, but cared for. Full Review Here 2. Sing Sing A24’s botched rollout of Sing Sing is the stuff of legend amongst cinephiles, as the film was meant to have a nationwide release over the summer following its TIFF premiere in 2023, which got turned into a limited release as the eventual nationwide date of August 2 only saw the film play a select number of theaters before a planned re-release to only 500 theaters on January 17. Suffice it to say, let’s hope those Academy screenings went off like gangbusters, because the lack of transparency around releasing the film to a wide audience that would have loved to actually get a chance to see it may have just cost it some key awards nominations, including Best Picture, if the PGA ten is anything to trust in that regard. (Amazon’s botched rollout of Nickel Boys is in the same boat.) Regardless of rollout though, Sing Sing is still one of the three best movies released at all in 2024, a film that revels in the fact that humanity needs art in order to be human, and to remind ourselves how we're all capable of dignity. Greg Kwedar’s drama about incarcerated persons at the Sing Sing correctional facility participating in an acting program for rehabilitation is the year’s most soulful and deeply felt film of the entire year, a film that revels in the fact that humanity needs art in order to be human, while art needs a human component to make it come to life, and to remind ourselves how we're all capable of royal dignity. It’s a miraculous achievement for everyone involved, especially those incarcerated who played themselves in the film. Colman Domingo turns in his best work to date, and Clarence “Divine Eye” Maclin is the acting discovery of the year, immediately ingratiating himself to the audience as the supporting performance of 2024. If and when you do get a chance to see this film in theaters, I would urge you to go immediately; you don’t want to miss how special this one is. Full Review Here 1. The Brutalist While it does seem the AI controversy for which the film received enormous backlash was blown way out of proportion, and despite my having put it at #1 when I was first drafting this ranking, I found myself struggling to justify keeping The Brutalist in this spot in the wake of such news. But then, I considered how I felt when I first saw the film all the way back in December, before anyone knew any of this, and well before director Brady Corbet had to set the record straight on the film’s minimalistic and (it would appear) quite industry-wide use of the tools at their disposal. For my own reasons, I find I cannot deny that experience, and the sheer power with which the film overtook my every waking thought for the week afterwards. The Brutalist remains, to put it bluntly, a monumental achievement of a film, an entirely new cinematic language in itself, harkening back to the epics of old like The Godfather or the ones of yester-year like There Will Be Blood, while simultaneously charting its own unique path forward, all to the sounds of Daniel Blumberg’s immediately iconic score, the best parts of which can all be found in the overture of the film. The epic three-and-a-half hour runtime – punctuated smartly by a 15-minute intermission – flies by in the viewing, and by the time it’s all over, one realizes that they’ve not felt a minute pass that didn’t absolutely need to be there. Personally, I love an epic that knows to embrace its length, rather than fear how many sales it will lose for lack of showtimes, and Brady Corbet is clearly not shy about how expansive his vision for the film – gorgeously shot by director of photography Lol Crawley on VistaVision – needed to be in order to tell this story. Adrien Brody turns in his best performance in the better part of twenty years as László Tóth, a Hungarian architect fleeing Europe post-WWII to come find a better life in America, only to discover that the mythical promise of the American dream is built by rich men on the backs of other people’s work, while Guy Pearce’s Harrison Lee Van Buren Sr. is not simply one of 2024’s most despicable characters, but maybe Pearce’s best ever. Special attention must be paid, too, to Felicity Jones as Erzsebet, who doesn’t really show up until the second half, but afterwards becomes the humanitarian focal point as László begins to slowly erode before our eyes. Even Joe Alwyn – while never matching these three – turns in great work here under Corbet’s direction, and while some may find his character a bit exaggerated, I never saw that exaggeration as anything but intentional on behalf of the character himself. There will be a lot to say about The Brutalist in the coming months leading up to the Oscars on March 2 (much of it bad-faith complaints rather than actual criticism, such is the way of film twitter), so I won’t spend too long on it here, but if I could urge readers one point of caution: do not let your first time seeing this be at home on your couch. Different viewing experiences can alter one’s perception of just about any movie, but to fully feel the power of certain films, they need to be experienced on the biggest screen with the best possible sound, and this is one of those films. As I did at my first viewing, I could sit in the corner of the front row again, and still feel amazed at what I was seeing and hearing, such is the sheer power and might of it all, which is just one of so many reasons why The Brutalist is my favorite movie of 2024. Full Review Here And those are our picks for the Top 10 Best Movies of 2024! What movies did you like best this year? Anything you’d recommend we catch up on? Let us know in the comments section below, and thanks for reading! - The Friendly Film Fan Honorable Mentions:
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by Jacob Jones Hello, all, and welcome back to The Friendly Film Fan! As we wind down this journey to our Top 10 Movies of 2024, we wanted to take a moment to celebrate the almost best in movies for the calendar year. Many of these films were some of our favorites of the whole year, but as there are only so many spots to fill out even within the shortlisted titles being considered for the Top 10, more than a few were bound to fall by the wayside. To that effect, we came up with the idea of “pre-honorable mentions,” a space for those films , more than a few were bound to fall by the wayside. To that effect, we came up with the idea of “pre-honorable mentions,” a space for those films that made us laugh, cry, scared us, moved us, impressed us, and challenged us, but just couldn’t make it over the finish line and out of longlist placement. (It’s important to note that this list does not act as a stand-in for the official Honorable Mentions of 2024, which is included with our Top 10 piece as a signifier of what else was included in the shortlist from which we found our choices.) This will be our final list before we unveil our Top 10 Movies of 2024, and there are more films included here than on most other lists, meaning our reflections on them may run a little more brief than usual. So, let’s not waste any more time in giving these films the recognition they deserve as well as we are able. These are the Pre-Honorable Mentions of 2024! Alien: Romulus When it was announced that director Fede Alvarez would be helming a new Alien project under the 20th Century Studios banner (i.e. under Disney), I instantly began looking forward to it – albeit with some healthy trepidation – and while the final product does feature imperfections in some fan service over-reliance that ultimately brings the overall product down a peg, that overall product was well worth the wait. Alvarez both understands the horror of Alien and the action sensibilities of Aliens better than almost any other director the franchise has yet brought in, though the horror elements in Romulus work stronger than the action elements overall. Between Alvarez’ confident pitching of the tones this movie walks, the great performances of its cast (especially David Jonsson), and the film’s fantastic set-pieces buoyed by stellar practical effects, Alien: Romulus is a long-sought victory for Alien sequels that manages to both honor the franchise’s roots while charting a new path forward. The Apprentice I’ve already written about this one in my Top 10 Most Underrated Movies of 2024, so I won’t spend too much time on it here, but suffice it to say, The Apprentice just might be the only piece of media about Donald Trump to release since his first Presidential term to actually examine the heart of his unconventional origins and the events ultimately responsible for his rise to power. Ali Abassi’s biopic centering on Trump’s early life isn’t so much interested in the Trump we know today as how the Ali Abassi’s biopic centering on Trump’s early life isn’t so much interested in the Trump we know today as how the (unfortunately) President-elect became who we know him to be, and places its focus squarely on the relationship between Trump and his infamously mysterious lawyer, the late Roy Cohn. The question alone makes Abassi’s biopic worth watching, but it’s the world-class performances of Jeremy Strong as Cohn and Sebastian Stan as Trump that ultimately put it a step above any other recent piece of Trump-centered media. A Complete Unknown The greatest magic trick that director James Mangold pulls in his biopic about the life of Bob Dylan as the folk icon came up through the 60’s into the start of his electric era is that he doesn’t really make it a biopic about Dylan’s life at all. Dylan by nature has always been a somewhat unknowable figure, and Mangold makes the wise decision not to attempt to figure him out but to showcase just how impossible it was, is, and always shall be to ever accomplish that task, this particular time period in Dylan’s career being the most openly reflective of that notion. Timothée Chalamet, of course, excels as Dylan, never imitating and always trusting the writing from James Mangold and co-writer Jay Cocks to carry the character, with Edward Norton turning in what might be his most low-key performance to date, as well as Boyd Holdbrook rivaling Joaquin Phoenix for the best on-screen Johnny Cash in a James Mangold film. Special attention must be paid, though, to Monica Barbaro, who not only learned to sing for the part of Joan Baez, but learned to sing exactly like Baez herself, one of the most iconic voices in music history. She’s really excellent in the film, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see her show up with an Oscar nomination to her name come Thursday. Dahomey Clocking in at barely over an hour, Mati Diop’s Dahomey is among the most beloved documentaries of the year, and it’s not hard to see why. Chronicling the return of 26 artifacts plundered by French colonialism to their original home in Benin, Diop’s urgent call for repatriation is as captivating as it is digestible, partly told through narration via one of the artifacts, partly through a meeting of Benin leaders and citizens concerning the events of the film and what they mean to both the plundered and the plunderer. The sound design is shockingly underrated even from those whom I’m aware have seen the film, and while I can’t say much both due to the film’s brevity and its relatively simple framework, the journey of watching it is one of the most moving one can have in any year it’s viewed. Didi Coming-of-age stories from indie studios are nothing new, but coming-of-age in the digital age is an especially tricky feeling to pull off well without seeming either condescending or simply too inexperienced to tackle such a delicate subject. Luckily, Sean Wang throws Didi into the mix at exactly the right pitch, capturing the adolescent anxiety of growing up in a time where everything around you is now being immortalized, and every decision you make feels like your social life literally depends on it. Joan Chen gives an Oscar-worthy turn as Wang Wang’s mother, and while it’s not an especially revolutionary character for her to be playing, she plays it with such grace and poise that one could be forgiven for forgetting that it’s a performance at all. For YouTubers especially, this movie is a different kind of special. Evil Does Not Exist Ryûsuke Hamaguchi’s Drive My Car was among the most celebrated films of 2021, going so far as to earn Oscar nominations for both Best Picture and Best Director, so why is it that his existentially reflective follow-up, Evil Does Not Exist, seems to have passed so many would-be enthusiasts by? One could asset that this is due to Japan’s passing it up as their submission for Best International Feature this year, opting instead to back Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s Cloud (which recently announced a summer 2025 release date in the U.S.). Or, as in many cases with smaller films such as this, it could be that the summer 2024 release was so limited that the film simply didn’t gain enough traction for Japan to push a filmmaker whose work has already been widely recognized on the world stage. But if I were to tell it, to really, honestly tell it, I would say that believe it or not, Evil Does Not Exist is simply a much more low-key film than Drive My Car, and without a three-hour runtime to sustain its subtleties, its unassuming, ambiguous narrative could pass people by if they don’t examine it with the same vigor. There’s little risk of spoilers for this one because so little happens in it narratively speaking, but its thematic implications pack a significant amount of weight. It was recently issued on blu-ray through Criterion’s Janus Contemporaries label, so if – like me – you’re a regular collector of physical media, I’d highly recommend giving it a shot. Hit Man Between Top Gun: Maverick, Anyone But You, and now Twisters, there’s no denying the theatrical appetite for Glen Powell’s movie star charm, but it’s in Richard Linklater’s Netflix crime comedy Hit Man where he turns in his best work to date in that regard. Based on a real-life Texas Monthly story written by Skip Hollandsworth, the film stars Powell (who co-wrote the script with Linklater) as a college professor who moonlights as a fake hitman for the New Orleans Police Department, essentially setting up anyone looking to hire so they can be arrested and taken off the streets. Regardless of how casually the film seems to treat entrapment law in general, the ride itself is a blast, and Powell is clearly having the time of his life, especially when paired with Adria Arjona, with whom he has an unbelievable amount of on-screen chemistry. (I mean, I don’t know who wouldn’t have chemistry with Glen Powell, but still.) It’s a real shame this one never got a theatrical release; it would play exceedingly well with a crowd. Kill Of all the action movies to come out in 2024, Kill was not the best (and no, I have not seen Shadow Strays yet), but it was by far the gnarliest. How confident do you have to be in how good your movie is to drop the title card halfway through, knowing you’ve saved almost all of the best stuff for after that happens? Sure, you could call this John Wick on a moving train, but the truth is the violence enacted here is of a largely different variety. There are kills in this film I have never seen before, including one with a thrown lighter that readers will know when they see it as one of the coolest takedowns in any action movie. Lakshya Lalwani excels in the lead part, and the stunt work is some of the best than Indian cinema has to offer. Kinds of Kindness Yorgos Lanthimos’ follow-up to the multi-Oscar-winning Poor Things may not be touching the same gold even given how unpredictable the current field is, but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t have value, and it turns out I seemed to enjoy it more than most. The first of the short films within this themed collection is easily its best, touting a Jesse Plemons performance that absolutely could compete for Best Actor in a slightly weaker year (and in fact won him the same award at last year’s Cannes film festival), but the latter two are also just as off-kilter and unpredictably chaotic as that one. If you’re a Lanthimos fan, even if you consider this one of his weaker entries, it’s still an undeniable good deal of fun. Longlegs The most viral marketing campaign of 2024 prior to Wicked’s complete domination in the fourth quarter belonged to none other than Osgood Perkins’ Longlegs, and while it is an imperfect film to be sure, I haven’t yet encountered a film whose marketing so perfectly encapsulated just how creepy it actually turned out to be. No, it’s not outright scary or terrifying in a studio horror sort of way, but everything that creeped me out as a child was on full display here, pitched straight at the old 70s shag carpets and windowless basements I used to encounter all the time, and drenched in an atmosphere of dread we could only be carried through by two vastly underrated performances from Maika Monroe and Blair Underwood. The talk of the town for this one, though, is Nicolas Cage as the titular character, able to turn the things that usually make him entertaining or annoying to the opposite side of his fandom into the very things that make his under-your-skin creepiness so effective here. If you’re a horror fan, but somehow missed this over the summer, do yourself a favor and watch it in complete darkness. Memoir of a Snail I came late to the game on Memoir of a Snail, as I wasn’t able to watch it until it finally hit VOD, but once I finally was able to view it, I found myself completely unable to resist its myriad charms. The animation is incredible creative, the story is moving in ways I didn’t expect, and it’s often quite funny, though parents be warned, this is not an animated movie for kids. All told, this is probably the most underrated animated movie of the year without Transformers in the title, and one of the medium’s few genuine successes in 2024. Rebel Ridge Carry-On might well end up being the most popular movie in Netflix history, but it’s far from its best, even within the calendar year of 2024, and while I still have a few of their originals left to catch up on (which unfortunately won’t be considered for my Top 10 due to time constraints), it’s gonna be tough to beat Rebel Ridge, director Jeremy Saulnier’s revenge thriller about a former marine who gets caught up in small-town corruption when the police department enacts a civil asset forfeiture on the money he’s meant to use to bail out his cousin. It’s not exactly the most high-minded concept, but it’s handled in exactly the right way for a movie of its type, and once Emory Cohen yells at Don Johnson’s police chief to put some distance between himself and Aaron Pierre’s hulking frame, the film turns up to eleven and seldom comes back down. This is the movie future movie historians will point to (if they can find it without a physical edition) when they indicate where Aaron Pierre became an action star, and as perfectly pitched three-star rides go, this one is 2024’s absolute best. Sugarcane Watching Sugarcane directly after having finished “The Nickel Boys” by Colson Whitehead in preparation for that film left me with an eerie, unsettled feeling, so similar are the two stories in setting and tone. tone. This documentary from National Geographic, which is available to watch now on Disney+ and Hulu, centers on a group of Canadian natives who endured years of mental, physical, and sexual abuse at an Indian residential school on the Sugarcane reserve where many of the natives went missing and were never found again. The film is an investigation into the events surrounding the disappearances, as well as a search for any possible mass grave wherein the native dead are buried. It’s far from an easy watch, but in some small way, its existence offers some justice in telling the story of these Canadian Indians, reckoning with their past and acknowledging the hurt and loss they’ve suffered, even when the responsible parties seem unable to do even as little as that. Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story You can read my full review for all my thoughts on this documentary, but suffice it to say, while it missing the Oscar shortlist for this category is disappointing, its presence at almost every other awards body’s events is a heartening thing to see. It may not do anything especially new to the documentary format, or even give us information on the titular Reeve that wouldn’t be easily available in public record, but it’s the way that directors Ian Bonhôte and Peter Ettedgui manage to tell Reeve’s story that makes the film so moving. Able to both excavate the super and celebrate the man, The Christopher Reeve Story deftly demonstrates to us all that, at least for a short while, we really did believe a man could fly. The Wild Robot As animated movies go, 2024 was not an especially strong year, and I don’t think it’s an unpopular notion amongst cinephiles that even within the cream of the crop, there were no outright masterpieces that rose to the top of the pack, no matter how charming or moving they were. What most people did seem to agree on is that neither of the best animated films of the year belonged to Disney or Pixar, and one of those two was Dreamworks’ The Wild Robot, which came to us from director Chris Sanders as he adapted the beloved children’s book with co-writer Peter Brown. The animation in Wild Robot is stunning, painterly without ever betraying the use of CG effects, but not so anti-CG that it looks truncated or any less smooth than it’s meant to. The story itself lacks a little emotional elevation, for my part (even if I do quite like Lupita N’yongo’s vocal performance), but so much of what makes this movie special is about the craft, including Kris Bowers’ excellent score which could Bowers himself an Oscar nomination. If you’re looking for an animated movie to watch with your kids, or even just for yourself, this is the best dialogue-inclusive one of the year. And those are our Pre-Honorable Mentions for 2024! Have you seen any of these films? Any guesses as to what triumphed over them in the Top 10? Let me know in the comments section below, and thanks for reading! (Next up: The Top 10 Best Movies of 2024!)
- The Friendly Film Fan by Jacob Jones Hello, all, and welcome back to The Friendly Film Fan! As we wind down our last days to the Top 10 Movies of 2024, we wanted to take this opportunity to show some love to the films that unfortunately did not make the cut for either the top ten themselves or the Pre-Honorable Mentions list that we do each year. Whether these films just didn’t quite live up to what they could’ve been, or we simply liked some others more, that doesn’t mean that they weren’t worth watching, examining, or spending time with along with everything else; there’s just only so many slots available, and only so many films that have the ability to fill those slots. With that in mind, we’d like to recommend to viewers the films below. You may see some entries on this list that we didn’t initially give positive reviews to, or even some that we’ve not mentioned up to now; those films are on this list due to the artistic merit we still believe they possess, worthy of discussion and examination regardless of whether we liked them or not. We also didn’t include any movies that could be found on other rankings based on titles, so if you don’t see any here you’d swear we liked, check out our Most Underrated list or – in the event you’re reading this later on – our Pre-Honorable Mentions list (Top 5 Scenes & Movie Moments entrants may still be included). In any case, we think all of the films listed are worth at least one watch, even if you never see them again afterwards. We won’t do you the disservice of breaking them all down one by one (that would make this piece excessively long), so in the spirit of brevity with which this list was made, let's get started! Underlined titles will feature links to our full reviews of those titles. Here are our Recommended Movies of 2024!
And those are our recommended movies of 2024! We’ll update the list once or twice as we round out the rest of what we wanted to see for the year (those Oscar shortlists can take a bit to get through), but for now, what do you think of these films? Any we missed that you would have included? Let us know in the comments section below, and thanks for reading!
- The Friendly Film Fan by Jacob Jones Hello, all, and welcome back to The Friendly Film Fan! We’re mere days away from revealing our picks for the Top 10 Movies of 2024, but before that, I wanted to shout out some of my favorite scenes and sequences throughout the year. Whether they were watched in the theater or re-watched them at home, the five scenes listed here continued to impress and delight, and occasionally, even got a little scary; in any case, I just couldn’t wait to talk about them with everyone I knew that shared those experiences. To that end, and in case you haven’t read one of these before, the very nature of this list acts as its own SPOILER WARNING, as I’ll be going over these scenes in great detail so as to examine what makes them so remarkable. I also limited these choices to one scene per film, so at the risk of spoiling part of the list, the Harkonnen Spice Harvester sequence from Dune: Part Two will not be making an appearance among the five finalists. We’ve only selected one scene per film, so at the risk of spoiling part of the list, and as much as we would consider it one of the best single movie scenes of 2024, the Spice Harvester attack scene from Dune: Part Two unfortunately will not make an appearance among the Top 5. Also, while there were a great many films released in 2024 that I thoroughly enjoyed, those films are greater successes as the sum of their parts than they are as highlight reels for particular scenes or set-pieces; it’s for this reason that some of the films listed here won’t be found in our Top 10 of the year, and likewise, some of the films that are included in the Top 10 will not include any particular stand-out sequences by which to call attention to themselves. And now, with all of these disclaimers in mind, let’s take a look back at The Friendly Film Fan’s picks for the Top 5 Best Scenes & Movie Moments of 2024! 5. Gas Station Birth – We Live in Time While I wasn’t personally as high on John Crowley’s decades-spanning romance as a lot of people seemed to be, We Live in Time is still a lovely movie that any fan of romance stories should would enjoy watching, regardless of how many tissues they end up going through in the process. With stellar performances from Andrew Garfield and Florence Pugh, the film’s stand-out sequence sees Almut (Pugh) and Tobias (Garfield) stuck at a petrol station en route to the hospital as Almut is going into labor with their daughter. Unfortunately for both of them, and for the station employees who appear ready to close for the evening, the labor process is well underway and moving too fast for either Tobias or Almut to go anywhere else. The resulting birth sequence – which takes place in the station’s ladies restroom – is not the best sequence in the film, but one of the best sequences of 2024. Gross, hysterical, stressful, and magical all at the same time as the station attendants assist Tobias in delivering he and Almut’s child, it’s a true highlight of the film watching these two individuals bring a new life into the world they share, and the four people all stuck in the bathroom together feel like their own little family. It’s an inspiring picture of how, even in the most unusual of circumstances, people from all different walks of life can come together and facilitate the happening of a genuine miracle. 4. D.C. Raid – Civil War There was a lot written about Alex Garland’s Civil War when it opened in April of last year to largely positive reviews and some divisive letterboxd takes. Everyone wanted to see whether A24 could pull off supporting a movie of this budget scale, and how Alex Garland would follow-up his even more divisive Men with what would turn out to be his final directing project (at least for now) in an era where the U.S. seems poised to make its title a reality every other minute. What side would Garland take? What does a modern civil war in the United States even look like? What would the film say to audiences who were fearful of the plot in front of them being made manifest? Would the film capture the same nervous energy as its exceptional set of trailers? While the answers to those first questions vary from person to person as the film is more interested in excavating photo-journalistic responsibility amongst dramatically divisive political moments, that final question was met with a resounding “yes,” and in no sequence more so is the energy of the film felt than the arresting raid on Washington D.C. that begins the film’s terrifically intense finale. With gunfire everywhere, helicopters flying through the city streets as bombs topple monuments, and the team inching ever closer to the White House – where it’s rumored the sitting three-term President (Nick Offerman) is shored up – the sequence lasts right up to the minute the President is finally shot dead by the Western Forces military, ending his reign – and the film – on a note of ambiguity the viewer will never shake. It’s this sequence that cements Garland as one of the best filmmakers to ever do it from a craft perspective, and it’s likely to be the one that solidifies the film’s eventual Best Visual Effects nomination at the Oscars (even though it really should be in Best Sound too). 3. War Rig – Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga One has to give massive props to George Miller for not making Furiosa just a re-skin of the incredible Mad Max: Fury Road, but there is at least one 15-minute action sequence reminiscent of the franchise’s previous entry so epic that according to the actors and those involved with the production, it had to be shot over a 78-day period. The sequence in question shows viewers the birth of the iconic War Rig vehicle which Furiosa uses in Fury Road to transport the five wives of Immortan Joe across the desert. In Furiosa’s case, it’s the first time we see Anya Taylor-Joy as the titular character in action, as well as her companion Pretorian Jack, one of the coolest characters George Miller has yet introduced to this world, even if he is essentially a stand-in for Max prior to Fury Road. The scene itself is a mini-epic inside the greater revenge epic of the film, demonstrating Miller’s ability at 79 years old to still craft and execute on the most insane action set pieces one’s ever seen committed to film. It’s so epic, in fact, we had to get the whole thing from a YouTube video split into two parts. You can check it out above (Part One on top). 2. Match Point – Challengers The back-and-forth between this and my number one spot was almost as intense and uncertain as the volley between Art (Mike Faist) and Patrick (Josh O’Connor) as they trade tennis racket blows for victory in the New Rochelle challenger match. At one point during a set, Patrick reveals to Art in the most telling of ways between the two that he and Tashi (Zendaya) slept together during a time when she and Art – her husband – were at a crossroads of conscience. Art becomes furious, but the sequence may not play out exactly as one might expect. Every bit of craft in the film reaches its apex here. The score by Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross, the direction from Luca Guadagnino, the editing from Marco Costa. It is, no pun intended, the climax of the sexiest film of the year at its tail end, a release of all the frustration and games played between the two men, a game that Tashi has both orchestrated and participated in since the three met all those years prior. It was in that fateful meeting where Tashi mentioned the film’s ultimate thesis as she and an opponent of hers shared what she called a really beautiful moment together, both understanding the game and each other on a level no one in the crowd could, and it’s in this final match that Art and Patrick finally share that same feeling, at once understanding each other and the game in the fullest sense of each. Even as the number two movie scene on this list, it claims the top spot as the most electrifying ending of the year in movies. 1. Worm Ride – Dune: Part Two Although the Harvester attack sequence will go down as one of the finest sci-fi action sequences ever put to film and is a highlight of the movie in its own right, it’s Dune: Part Two’s masterwork of a centerpiece that sets itself apart from all other set-pieces to be the defining moment in movies of 2024. Having immersed himself in Fremen culture and taken up arms against the Harkonnens who slaughtered his family and attempted to wipe out his bloodline, Paul Atreides must face his final test to become a member of the Fremen clan by riding the great sandworm, what the Fremen call Shai-Hulud. It is the most dangerous task any Fremen can perform, and the way the sequence is shot and edited together, paired with Hans Zimmer’s magnificent score and sound design that likens the sandworm to a space shuttle taking off, practically lifts the viewer of their chair and ascends them to the heavens themselves. Dune: Part Two is a miracle of adaptation, one of the greatest sci-fi movies ever made, and this is the singular jeweled moment inlaid in its 2024 movie moments crown. The fact that moments from both Dune (2021) and Dune: Part Two landed atop my list of the best movie moments of their respective years should be reason enough for the DGA to re-evaluate their choice not to nominate Denis Villeneuve, and a stern warning to the Academy not to make the same mistake. And those were my picks for the Top 5 Best Scenes & Movie Moments of 2024! What scenes did you like best this year? How would you rank these five? Let me know in the comments section below, and thanks for reading! - The Friendly Film Fan Honorable Mentions:
by Jacob Jones Hello, all, and welcome back to The Friendly Film Fan! As we rapidly approach the day upon which I will unveil my Top 10 Movies of 2024, I wanted to make sure I gave a special shout to some of the year’s more underrated films. While it wasn’t the strongest overall year for movies, there were plenty of them to celebrate, and a particular few that seemed to get passed over, whether by awards bodies or by critics – including myself – who perhaps don’t recognize their full value beyond the potential they provide for the filmmakers to improve with future projects. As is the case with every year, I haven’t seen everything that might qualify for placement on this list, so for those of you hoping to see things like Sasquatch Sunset or Snack Shack amongst the mentions may end up, this may be a disappointing journey; nevertheless, I do hope that the presence of these titles might prompt some of you to finally check them out or inspire you to give them a second look. After all, art is about constant evaluation and re-evaluation; maybe a few of these will mean something different to you now than they did when you first saw them! In either case, whether you’ve seen these films or not, I’m of the mind that perhaps they deserve a little more love than they’ve been given. Here are our picks for the Top 10 Most Underrated Movies of 2024! 10. Nightbitch Marielle Heller’s part genre, part drama tale of a woman being driven so crazy by motherhood that she things she’s turning into a dog may not sound like the basis for a successful project, and in some senses, that might be true – the harder genre bits don’t work as well when paired with the other half of the film, and a few of its supporting elements lack enough cohesion or development to really justify their inclusions – but on the whole, Nightbitch is far better than its marketing would lead one to believe. Amy Adams’ committed performance is among her best work to date, and could certainly be counted as her best in several years, to the point where I wondered considerably if she had a legitimate shot at a SAG nomination. The film itself also deals with the trials of early motherhood and raising a (way-too-well-behaved) toddler in a way that a lot of other films about the subject can’t seem to parse, at least not with the nuance this carries. 9. Juror #2 We are in serious danger of forgetting just how good a director Clint Eastwood can be when films like Juror #2 are unceremoniously released to only 50 theaters and then shuttered off to streaming as a Max Original (I will never forgive David Zaslav for that). The film is imperfect, absolutely, but it’s still a far better film than anything with this much hockiness and sincere faith in the American justice system has any right to be. This is one of Eastwood’s best movies in years, and it’s unfortunate to think that it very well could be his last. I go back and forth on whether the ending is good or not, but it’s everything before – including Nicholas Hoult’s incredible leading performance – that makes the film so consistently engaging and worth spending time on. The scene in the garage in particular is among my favorite acting moments in all of 2024, and Hoult nails every subtle expression required in that sequence to both make you empathize with him and believe him a coward, with no clear lean toward either end. If you haven’t checked this one out yet, I’d highly recommend giving it a shot. 8. Cuckoo Sometimes all one needs is a deeply weird, odd-feeling horror movie to remind you that the genre can still surprise you with just how strange it can still be, and Tillman Singer’s Cuckoo is exactly the right kind of odd-ball horror that the genre needs to stay interesting. The film may not succeed at every turn, but the always-engaging Hunter Schafer holds it all together with a central performance essentially confirming what anyone who’s seen her act before already knew: she has real star power, capably carrying the film largely on her own shoulders. Of course, it helps that she has Dan Stevens to play off of, who looks like he’s having the time of his life getting to sink his teeth into such a weird, off-putting character. The thing that makes Cuckoo so underrated, though, is that even when it misses amongst all the shots it takes, the miss leads to somewhere interesting, a new avenue to explore or idea to consider. Even if the whole thing doesn’t ultimately land the plane, at least it’s a memorable flight. 7. Transformers One Shame, shame, shame on all organizations and awards groups with animation categories that passed by the far better than it had any right to be Transformers One. While I won’t contend that it would’ve actually stood a chance at winning the category for any awards body or critics group, it being left off the list for almost all of them – even the Globes, who had six slots available – is completely unjustifiable. Josh Cooley’s origin story for the iconic rivalry of Optimus Prime and Megatron isn’t just far from the disaster its trailers made it look like, it’s actually a genuinely heartfelt story of betrayal, division, and what it looks like when the truth is more than meets the eye. The voice performances from Chris Hemsworth and Brian Tyree Henry carry some beautiful animation over the finish line, and the film’s final moments deserve to be answered by a sequel that unfortunately is unlikely to ever occur. This one deserves a lot more respect. 6. The Apprentice Trying to unpack the enigma of Donald Trump would be an impossible task even for the most seasoned of filmmakers. How do you even begin to understand someone so notoriously buffoonish that he wants to take over Canada, rename the gulf of Mexico, and keeps Elon Musk of all people close to the chest? How do you interrogate the character of someone so cartoonishly evil that he inspired a whole mob of people to attempt an insurrection after he lost his initial attempt at a second term as President? Well, as hard as he tries to convince us otherwise, Trump is a human being, and all human beings come from somewhere. Whether circumstantially or deliberately, he is the way he is for a reason. Ali Abbasi's biopic about Trump’s early life – and chiefly regarding his relationship with Roy Cohn, pitched here as the man who essentially created the Trump we know – doesn’t simply probe these uncomfortable questions, but refuses to give clear answers to them. It really is one of the most accomplished studies of a somewhat unknowable individual. It really is one of the most accomplished studies of a somewhat unknowable individual to come out in recent years, and major credit should go to star Sebastian Stan for keeping this movie in the cultural conversation regardless of how difficult the questions is asks are to face. Between Stan and co-star Jeremy Strong, there should be two guaranteed Oscar nominations, and all those publicists that refused to pair their stars with Stan for Variety’s Actors on Actors series should feel a deep shame in avoiding the elephant in the room – the exact opposite of what the best art does. 5. Between the Temples Starring Jason Schwartzman as a cantor in the midst of a crisis of faith whose former grade school music teacher approaches him to inquire about having her own Bat Mitzvah, Between the Temples is just as crazy, funny, discomforting, charming, strange, and deeply endearing as its plot can manage to allow. The chemistry between Schwartzman and his co-star Carol Kane is off the charts, the latter of the two absolutely radiating a bouncy energy that perfectly compliments Schwartzman’s trepidation around just about everything he does. The film also features some of the year’s most daring filmmaking moments, and resolves in a way that both enriches itself and leaves viewers to wonder: where do these characters even go from here? 4. Thelma No, this is not the International Feature contender from 2017 directed by Joachim Trier; this Thelma is hoping to steal Tom Cruise’s stunt crown and become the new Queen of Stunts. At 93 years old, June Squibb – whom most readers would probably know from her work in the film Nebraska – does all her own stunts in one of the year’s sweetest films with a sincere sense of humor about itself. Thelma is an absolute joy, boasting not only one of my favorite lead performances of the year from Squibb, but one of the most underrated supporting turns as well from the late Richard Roundtree in what would turn out to be his final part. Almost every joke lands, and any movie that joins Parker Posey, Clark Gregg, and Fred Hechinger together to make up the family taking care of June Squibb deserves not only a lot more respect, but a lot more attention. 3. Wicked Little Letters It came out relatively early in the year, so one could be forgiven for forgetting that it even released this year at all, but Wicked Little Letters – which had its U.S. release in March – is one of 2024’s most charmingly naughty tales. Starring Jessie Buckley as a woman accused of writing a series of heinous letters in a pious community, and Olivia Colman as the letters’ recipient, the film is a great deal of fun, especially in the back and forth between its leading stars. Give two of the U.K.’s best actresses working today a shot at a small-time script, and they’ll milk it for all its worth. The film is streaming on Netflix for those inclined to take a watch. 2. Strange Darling One of the things that excites me most as I grow as a critic and branch out through all different kinds of filmmaking is the discovery of a new voice I hadn’t yet known. That’s exactly what happened when I saw Strange Darling, a new horror film from J.T. Mollner that feels like the director – along with cinematographer Giovanni Ribisi, who shot the gorgeous-looking movie on 35mm film – emerging as a new voice in the horror space, and an exciting one to discover at that. Of course, it helps that scream king Kyle Gallner is involved to offer the project the notoriety it needs to get it off the ground, but its Willa Fitzgerald’s multi-layered lead performance that ended up taking me completely by surprise. Even in seeing the trailers for the film, I had no idea where it was supposed to go, and if you think you might wanna take a chance on it, I’d recommend – at the risk of spoiling an element of the plot – that you go in as blind as possible. The next film on the list might be more underrated overall, but this by far was my favorite surprise of the year. 1. Daddio Over the summer, in June, a little movie released nationwide called Daddio. It wasn’t a large release, and in fact I didn’t get to see it until much later, but I couldn’t believe how few people were talking about it. Dakota Johnson stars as a woman coming back home from a family visit, with Sean Penn giving his best performance in years as her cab driver. The whole movie, right up to its ending, takes place inside this New York taxi cab, a simple conversation between two people that becomes far deeper and more meaningful than any conversation between a cab driver and passenger has any right to be, let alone a conversation that lasts almost 90 minutes. Both characters unveil layers to themselves throughout that surprise in small ways, and yet we know both of them completely from minute one; they’re fully realized, but never fully evolved. Frankly, there’s not a lot else to say about Daddio because there’s not much to the filmmaking itself, but if readers are looking for a good, solid bottle movie that won’t eat at their time and will leave them feeling good at the end of the day, I can’t think of a more underrated film experience from 2024 than this one. And those are my picks for the Top 10 Most Underrated Movies of the 2024! What movies did you think were undervalued this year? Let me know in the comments section below, and thanks for reading! - The Friendly Film Fan Honorable Mentions:
by Jacob Thomas Jones Greeting, all, and welcome back to The Friendly Film Fan! 2023 sure was a great year for movies, and 2024 looks to be another banger of a cinematic calendar. One of the lead stories of 2023 was the SAG-AFTRA and WGA strikes, which led studios to push certain films into 2024 in order for actors and writers to continue and begin promotional work on both small and larger-profile projects. These projects ranged from the highly-anticipated Dune: Part Two to Luca Guadagnino’s tennis film Challengers, the latter of which was one of the first major moves off of the 2023 slate. However, as a result of those moves, we may be getting more quality cinema in 2024 than even we’re expecting. A few notes on the list order before we begin: given some of those films’ larger prominence and imminent release dates, they may appear lower on this list than you might expect. The fact is, there are others with more mystery surrounding them that adds a layer of excitement some of the lower-numbered entrants don’t necessarily lack, but no longer possess in quite the same way. As well, while some of the films higher on the list have less information available or a lack of current footage, the information that is available is elevates them above other, more obvious candidates. There are also any number of films due to release this year that simply don’t have enough information available yet to be included on this list, and some that may be expected to release this year could get pushed into 2025, so while it’s possible some of these end up on the Top 10 Best Movies of 2024 list, one can’t bank on that. As with the Top 10 Best Movies of 2023 list, there are a few films in the Honorable Mentions section that are listed in numerical order of anticipation due to how much we’re looking forward to them over the other, non-numbered alphabetical entries, but all the films on this list carry some level of excitement for us, so let’s get started. Here are our picks for the Top 10 Most Anticipated Movies of 2024! 10. Horizon: An American Saga Kevin Costner is back in the director’s chair with an epic western event that not only has a theatrical release but already has an announcement trailer from Warner Bros. Given that its multi-part stories have not yet separated themselves in either footage or plot details, I’m just including them both as just one big entry here. With Chapter 1 dropping in June and Chapter 2 finishing the job in August, there’s a lot to look forward to, especially as Costner has invested a lot of his own money into developing the project after having left the series Yellowstone in order to make it happen. We haven’t gotten a proper Western genre epic in a long time, and to see Costner back in the director’s chair on a Western project so long after Dances with Wolves is cause for excitement. Hopefully this will be one of the moviegoing events of the summer (provided its quality is as high as it can go). 9. The Bikeriders The first film on this list to fall victim to the SAG-AFTRA strike of 2023, Jeff Nichols’ The Bikeriders will be the first feature film the director has released in 8 years, following the severely underrated Loving in 2016. The film – which debuted at the Telluride Film Festival in August 2023 and was slated to release that December – was dropped by Disney following the strikes in what seemed like a revenge move against SAG-AFTRA, later being picked up by Focus Features for a June 2024 release. Inspired by the 1967 photo-book of the same name, the fictional story tracks a biker gang from the streets of Chicago all across America’s Midwest, and stars the likes of Jodie Comer, Austin Butler, Tom Hardy, and Mike Faist. Nichols is one of our greatest yet most under-sung filmmakers and this looks to be yet another film of his that utilizes a brilliant ensemble cast and likely excellent script to their fullest effect. 8. Dune: Part Two It may seem odd for Denis Villeneuve’s long-awaited follow-up to Dune to be this low on the list, but that doesn’t mean that we’re not still hotly anticipating its arrival. The first film in this two-part adaptation of Frank Herbert’s iconic novel was a remarkably well-crafted production of sci-fi glory that wasn’t afraid to take its time establishing everything we would need to know in order to understand this world, and every element from the cinematography to the score to the sound design heralded the arrival of a new genre classic. Part Two promises to add everything the first film missed – or at least, sort of missed – with a greater emphasis on action, a more thorough understanding of Zendaya’s character Chani and the Fremen people with which she is embedded, and the added cast powers of Florence Pugh, Austin Butler, and Christopher Walken. If these trailers have shown us anything, it’s that Villeneuve was exactly the right person to helm these adaptations, and if he’s snubbed for Best Director a second time, the Academy and I will have words. 7. Mufasa: The Lion King If you weren’t aware, director Barry Jenkins – the man behind Moonlight, If Beale Street Could Talk, and the Prime Video limited series The Underground Railroad – was tapped some time ago by Disney to direct a live-action Lion King prequel film centered around the character of Mufasa. The latter part of that description leaves a lot to be desired in terms of voter confidence, no doubt about it. However, while live-action Disney projects as of late have ranged from poor to not-as-poor in quality, Barry Jenkins is one of the highest-quality filmmakers we have, and unless a Dial of Destiny-level misfire occurs, this is likely to be yet another incredibly poetic, beautiful, and miraculous notch in the Barry Jenkins quality belt. If anything, it will be something to remember. 6. Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga It’s been nine years since we last had a Mad Max adventure on the silver screen, and if its first trailer is any indication, the theatrical space has sorely missed George Miller’s fast and furious apocalypse franchise. As a prequel to one of the most badass Best Picture nominees ever in Mad Max: Fury Road, Furiosa tracks the titular Imperator’s journey from her beginnings to her eventual rise within the ranks of Immortan Joe’s inner circle. Sure, some of the CGI in the trailer looks a bit wonky, but this thing comes out in May, so there’s plenty of time for improvements, and with superstar Anya Taylor-Joy stepping into Furiosa’s desert boots – tagging in Chris Hemsworth as the new Max – I have very little doubt that this Mad Max Saga won’t at least mostly satisfy. 5. Blitz You’d be forgiven for not even knowing what this was, since there’s very little publicly available information and absolutely zero footage yet, but what ultimately matters is that Steve McQueen, the man behind 12 Years a Slave, Widows, and the Prime Video short film series Small Axe, is directing a movie about the blitz of London during WWII, and has tagged in Saoirse Ronan and Harris Dickinson to play his two leads. McQueen is one of the most singularly talented and visionary filmmakers working today, and with leads like that – plus a likely Christmastime release date – this thing seems like a major awards player already. We’ll just have to wait and see how much of a player it is. 4. Civil War While Alex Garland’s Men was an unusual but nonetheless interesting miss for the director compared to his previous two works, his remains one of the most consistently quality careers in entertainment, both as a writer and in the head chair. And with A24 expanding their typically indie portfolio to larger-budget projects such as action films and IP-based adaptations, they couldn’t have chosen a better or more innovative filmmaker to launch with. Civil War looks intense, terrifying, and insanely well-put together, its first trailer jolting one into fight or flight almost as easily as its characters (Jesse Plemons might be too good at this job), and with secret weapon Stephen McKinley Henderson on the call sheet, there’s little doubt that this will be one of the most talked-about and impressive movies of the year. 3. Mickey 17 Recently delayed “indefinitely” by Warner Bros. Discovery in order to move up Godzilla x Kong’s nationwide release, Mickey 17 is all but certain to debut in late 2024 as a major awards season player, thanks to the likes of Academy Award Winner Bong Joon Ho – who made a little movie called Parasite (the first non-English language movie to ever win Best Picture) – and superstar Robert Pattinson teaming up for a sci-fi movie that already has an announcement trailer available to watch. Plot details have been kept pretty close to the chest, but I’m hoping more is revealed soon, and I hope what is revealed is as weird and eclectic as the rest of Bong Joon Ho’s filmography. This will be the director’s first fully English-language film, and simply based on him and Pattinson alone, I’m more than confident in its overall quality being high, hence its placement this far up the list. 2. Nosferatu Nosferatu is one of the most iconic films ever made, the first to popularize the titular vampire as a horror icon, and still one of the best vampire films available even though it came out in 1922. There have been other film adaptations of the character before – most notably Werner Herzog’s 1979 film Nosferatu the Vampyre – but nothing quite like what visionary director Robert Eggers is sure to be cooking up. Bill Skarsgård stars as the character, with the additional cast of Lily-Rose Depp, Nicholas Hoult, and Willem Dafoe. Dafoe in particular has had some extremely praiseworthy words for Eggers’ directing, and with a Christmas Day release date, Focus Features seems extremely confident in their product. Robert Eggers films are some of the best around, always extremely well-crafted and brimming with commitment to whatever story is being told; this is a perfect fit for him, and I cannot wait to see how he envisions this world and this iconic character. 1. Megalopolis For the better part of two decades, Francis Ford Coppola has been building up his revenues with his and his daughter’s other companies – including a quite popular winery – to self-finance this passion project about an architect who wants to rebuild New York City as a utopia following an unprecedented disaster. There simply is no other spot on this list more befitting for the man behind The Godfather trilogy and Apocalypse Now, especially not when he’s working with Adam Driver – whose words of praise for his director should not go unnoted – as his leading man. With all of that information, plus the title itself being a play on Metropolis (another iconic film ripe for re-interpretation), my confidence is quite high. Any movie can suck, including those by some of the greatest filmmakers to ever be in the business; in fact, a few of Francis Ford Coppola’s more recent films have been rather poor. But my instincts on this one, and the knowledge that Coppola’s less quality films were made largely after he ran out of money to make movies on his own, tell me that we’re about to receive a film from Coppola the likes of which we haven’t seen before in the best possible way. And those are our picks for the Top 10 Most Anticipated Movies of 2024! What movies are you looking forward to this year? Let us know in the comments section below, and thanks for reading! - The Friendly Film Fan Honorable Mentions:
11. Challengers 12. Hit Man 13. Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes 14. The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim 15. Deadpool 3 16. Twisters 17. The Wolf Man 18. Joker: Folie à Deux 19. Wicked: Part One 20. Gladiator II
by Jacob Thomas Jones Well, here we are. We’ve finally made it to the end. It’s been a long journey getting to this point, across oceans of quality film and vast fields of work that almost landed the plane, but as is the case every year, some truly excellent material had to get cut for this list to happen as it’s meant to. In fact, this year was such an excellent year for film and filmmaking – despite the lead film industry stories from this year being WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes that caused more than a few of this list’s potential candidates to get pushed into the 2024 calendar – that in order to whittle the list down to 10, I had to start with a shortlist of 15 and put that list in numerical order first just to find out what went in the #11 spot (#15-#11 are listed below in the Honorable Mentions section along with unranked, alphabetically-ordered selections). This is my favorite list to write every year, and I can’t wait to gush about some of these films for the first time ever alongside the ones I’ll be gushing about even more than I already have. So, without further ado, here are my picks for the Top 10 Best Movies of 2023! 10. May December Is this movie camp? I don’t think so, but it does run pretty close to a brilliant satire. While I don’t know that I’d consider it a masterpiece like the rest of my colleagues seem to, May December puts Todd Haynes in easily his best mode since Carol, and maybe even a better one than that. A film about how exploitation often drives the film industry to do what it does even when it’s damaging to those whose lives are being put up on screen for our entertainment is a risky move from such an established filmmaker, and if you saw the SAG award nominations, actors in particular were none too happy about it. Easily one of the year’s best scripts (and from a first-timer no less!) shines by way of being combined with three of the absolute best performances in any piece of 2023 media, especially Julianne Moore and Charles Melton. Yes, Natalie Portman is excellent as well, but it’s Melton in particular that really shines here, breaking free of his Riverdale stigma to deliver maybe the year’s best supporting performance. There are line readings and moments in this film so devastating they hit you right in the jugular, and the editing is some of the best I’ve seen in any Netflix film. 9. Barbie I flipped between this and Poor Things so many times when it came to what films would be included on this list, it almost gave me whiplash, but while Poor Things is a film I do love and respect a lot, this spot ultimately came down to “favorite” vs. “best,” and favorite won out; I’ve returned to Barbie far more times since my first viewing, and I’ll likely return many more times since the film is just so fun. Yes, one could argue that the film is Feminism 101, but for a commercial Barbie movie to have even this much nuance is something only director Greta Gerwig could have pulled off in exactly this way. This is, without doubt, the best version of this movie we possibly could have gotten with this wide of an appeal. The production and costume designs are immaculate, most of the jokes land like gangbusters, Ryan Gosling’s supporting performance is an all-timer for the man’s career, Margot Robbie is a superstar both in her lead performance and in the film’s production, and Greta Gerwig’s filmography – while I do think this might be the weakest film in it – is already one of the most iconic in movie history. She’s one of the great singular artists of this century, and her achievement of getting her first 3 films all nominated for Best Picture cannot be more worthy of praise. 8. Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret. For a long time, I struggled with whether or not this movie belonged on this list above other excellent work like Poor Things or even May December, but at the end of the day, this is my list, and Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret. was, to me, the culmination of all coming-of-age stories from the mid-2010s to now, the most befitting of the genre and the most appropriately adapted work in that space to come along in years. I know it’s cliché, but we just don’t get movies like this anymore. Stories that feel like they would have come out in the 90s and made classics by way of repeat viewings all the way up to now. The soft, unobtrusive direction of Kelly Fremon Craig, the unfairly under-awarded supporting performance of Rachel McAdams, the excellent star-making turn of Abby Ryder Forston in the title part, and the warm fallbacks of Kathy Bates and Benny Safdie batting cleanup make this one not only well worth your time, but an excellent one for kids and young adults to grow up on. 7. Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse I loved Into the Spider-Verse when it came out; it changed the medium of animation as a whole and set a new bar for what these things could look like, and while I don’t know if Across the Spider-Verse is narratively as tight and well-structured as its immediate predecessor, I never expected in a million years that this team would be able to pull off the same magic trick twice with even larger leaps. This is one of the most stunningly-crafted movies of the year; the sound design is excellent, the animation yet again reshapes and redefines what can be done in this medium, the narrative – one that directly confronts the idea that canon is more important than innovation, that Miles is supposedly “not the real Spider-Man” – is even more mature and brilliant than the last one, the sheer use of color and that magnificent score elevate this one in craft so far above where any animated movie has ever gone, it’s even more ground-shaking that the last one was. It is an absolute crime that this – the second-best score of the year – was snubbed by the Oscars in favor of Indiana Jones, and if they stick the landing on the third film, a film on which I hope they take all the time they need, we’ll be looking at a new contender for the best animated trilogy of all time, and a new entrant in the “Best Trilogies of All Time” canon (not that canons matter), full stop. 6. Anatomy of a Fall I’m not sure what France is doing with their International Feature submissions, but swapping out this magnificently-crafted mystery for the more formalistic The Taste of Things (which I have heard is excellent nonetheless) may go down as one of the all-time bad moves in Oscar submission history. It’s difficult to describe just what makes Justine Triet’s Anatomy of a Fall so damn good without simply fawning over things the film has in it – hot lawyer, all-timer movie dog, show-stealing supporting child performance from Milo Machado Graner, Sandra Hüller showing up to dominate the best performances of the year conversation – but what sets it apart is how it uses both the mystery of the fall itself and the French court system to dissect a relationship and put the very idea of marriage on trial for its life. The script is bound to win the Best Original Screenplay Oscar, and when that happens, you’ll hear no protest from me. 5. Maestro I don’t care that this has become film twitter’s villain of the year; I loved this movie, and I shall continue to love it because Maestro blew me away in both its artistry and its ambition. Exquisitely crafted from top to bottom, with some of Matthew Libatique’s most stunning cinematography to date, Maestro is Bradley Cooper not so much dissecting Leonard Bernstein as he is the artist’s struggle, choosing to channel the legendary composer rather than embody him. In his thorough examination of Bernstein’s marriage to Felicia Montealegre – along with all its complications, its tragedies, its highs and lows – Cooper never disappears or transforms, but one can feel the same energy that Bernstein likely experienced flowing through Cooper’s performance at every turn, and Cooper’s direction also supports this notion. Carey Mulligan is as excellent here as she’s ever been, and the Ely Cathedral sequence remains to this day my favorite singular movie scene of 2023. 4. Past Lives For a very long time, Past Lives was my favorite movie of the year, a soulful examination of the choices we make and how those choices shape the people we become. Greta Lee turns in an Oscar-worthy performance as Nora, a young Korean woman whose departure from Korea means having to ultimately part ways with her childhood sweetheart, only for them to reconnect years later when Nora herself has an entire life of her own with a husband she met after breaking things off. The always undervalued John Magaro shines as Lee’s shockingly understanding husband in the face of some incredibly discomforting circumstances, and Teo Yoo gives my favorite singular performance of the year as Hae Sung, the resurfaced childhood sweetheart in question. It will be a long time before I see another film with this delicate of a script that reaches into the depths of my soul as deeply as Past Lives did (at least, in the positive sense), delivering not just one but two of the all-time heartbreaker sequences in the bar scene and the film’s magnificently emotional ending moments. I can’t believe this is Celine Song’s debut feature. 3. Oppenheimer It shouldn’t be possible for a director as revered, respected, and as much a titan of industry as Christopher Nolan is to make their best film 11 movies deep into their career…and yes, I said best film. While I still hold space at the top for the way The Dark Knight shook the ground and changed superhero films forever, Oppenheimer is a genuine masterwork from a director in full command of his craft and easily the best-directed movie of Nolan’s entire filmography. The performances are second-to-none, with Cillian Murphy finally getting his chance to shine as Nolan’s leading man, Emily Blunt once again showing us all why she’s been an Oscar-worthy performer all along, Robert Downey Jr. pulling a complete 180 on his Iron Man persona to demonstrate that if he has anything, it’s the range, and a supporting ensemble so deep and stacked with talent in all the right places they might as well be the single greatest ensemble cast ever assembled for a single motion picture. Josh Hartnett! Matt Damon! Florence Pugh! David fucking Krumholtz! Even the one-scene cameos are powerhouse players! But what sets Oppenheimer’s immaculate cast and insane-level craft work (including amazing editing by Jennifer Lame and Ludwig Göransson’s best musical score to date) apart from Nolan’s other films is its non-confidence about the existence of the atomic bomb. Almost all of Nolan’s other features, even if they deal with some sort of controversial issue, end up feeling like the side they’ve taken is the right one to be on. With Oppenheimer, Nolan confronts head-on the consequences of adding atomic, potentially world-ending weapons to a world that just can’t seem to quit warring with itself. It’s not about the cost of doing the necessary work; it’s about whether the work was ultimately necessary at all, and what kind of world is created when miraculous acheivements are taken out of an artist’s hands for the control of those who don’t understand their power. A singular and visionary work that will be viewed in the years to come as one of Nolan’s greatest films. 2. The Zone of Interest The one film I knew I had to see before finishing this Top 10 list was The Zone of Interest, especially as it’s not even remotely the kind of film the Academy usually clings to – an avant-garde examination of evil’s regularity, a direct gaze into the eyes but not the heart of hell. Immediately after finishing the film, I was struck by something I had not felt in years: anguish, of a kind that rendered me entirely and helplessly speechless for the duration of my drive home. It feels wrong to describe this as one of my “favorites” of the year, or as a film I “loved,” so profoundly distressing was the film to my soul; it would almost feel evil to describe it that way. And this film is evil incarnate; at least, that is the entire subject. The unsettling sound design and haunting score leave one simply paralyzed in horror at what was witnessed, and I have not been this upset by a film since seeing Schindler’s List for the first time; in more ways than one, this film is even more disconcerting. From my letterboxd review: “The Zone of Interest takes one to such a place of thorough and irreparable discomfort that one cannot understand it except in the context of the evil it depicts, an evil bolstered by its lack of viscerality. There's a purposeful avoidance of grandiosity, of emotionality; there is no peek over the wall to offer some validation that the banality we are witnessing is monstrous, even as we can audibly hear its depravity all around us.” While it doesn’t take my number one spot, this is in my mind the best film of the year, and I so desperately hope that those who see it will understand what it is telling them. 1. Killers of the Flower Moon When I first saw Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon, I considered it to be a fantastic addition to the director’s late-late period work, but I did not consider it a masterpiece. After a second and finally a third watch in theaters, I can confidently say that not only do I consider Killers an outright masterpiece, I also consider it the best of Scorsese’s late-late period films, those ranging from The Wolf of Wall Street to now. Those who have read my writing know how big a fan I am of the director, so his film landing at my number one spot may seem like no surprise, but for a long time, this sat down at the number three spot and was almost beat out by number two. What I ultimately had to consider was: what makes this my favorite film of the year? Is it the brilliantly-told story which contextualizes the mass murder of an entire people by confronting the fact that it was all too easy to do before the FBI showed up and even after they showed up they didn’t seem to actually care how horrific everything was? Is it the phenomenal work of Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro, or the career-making turn from Lily Gladstone outshining them both working with a director for which they were the two muses for years? Is it the note-perfect cinematography, the god-like editing that prioritizes pacing over runtime, the severely underrated sound design, and the incredibly-adapted script which turned this from an intriguing and shocking true-crime tale into one of tragedy and complicity? In truth, it’s all of these things, and one more: the ending. I already wrote extensively about Killers of the Flower Moon’s ending in my Top 5 Scenes & Movie Moments piece, but without the ending, this would be just another fantastic addition to Scorsese’s filmography. With it, it feels almost like a goodbye, like Scorsese is pouring every last bit of his heart and soul into whatever he makes now because he feels that he needs to leave something valuable and worthwhile behind when he inevitably passes. He is confronting both us and himself for even considering this epic tale of tragedy – of the white man’s indifference to generational sufferings perpetrated by those in power against those without, of greed, of complicity, of year after year of an entire people being erased – as entertainment in the first place. He reckons with this and with his own shortcomings in not being able to fully tell the story from the Osage perspective, for he is not Osage, and will not be able to do it sufficiently. At the end of it all, the whole thing becomes a radio show, and Scorsese himself pleads with us all: do not forget these people, and do NOT forget what happened to them. It can be all too easy for marginalized people groups, or those suffering genocide, to be ignored or forgotten by those whose status and personhood will never be threatened in this way. And all of that is what makes Killers of the Flower Moon my number one movie of 2023. Well, we did it! We finished all the Top 10 lists for 2023, and only have one more Top 10 to go! Of course, we also have The Friendly Film Fan Awards nominations, which will be announced live on our Instagram page on January 28 at 2:00 p.m. EST (a full list of nominees will be furnished on the website). What were your favorite films of 2023? Any great work you wanna shout out? Let us know in the comments section below, and thanks for reading! - The Friendly Film Fan Honorable Mentions:
by Jacob Thomas Jones Making movies is hard. It’s one of the hardest things to pull off successfully, if one manages to pull it off at all with how few of them actually end up getting made. This is partly why so many film critics and pundits opt out of making “Worst” lists entirely. The creation of art is something to be celebrated in itself, and no one wants to tear down people who work incredibly hard to make their movies a reality. The Friendly Film Fan recognizes this wholeheartedly and wishes nothing but the best for anyone attempting to mount a miracle task such as filmmaking. Unfortunately, not every movie can be good, even with a lot of effort; in fact, there were any number of disappointments from the cinematic year of 2023 (you can view that list here), from superhero movies at least temporarily going bust to a lack of vision from some tried-and-true animation studios to brilliant concepts wasted on poor execution. And yet, inevitably, there were also films that were so bad, so poorly conceived and executed, that they managed to be even worse. Our picks for these lists are not direct reflections on the filmmakers themselves or the people who work tirelessly to make these things happen. They are entirely chosen based on the quality of the films themselves as singular art pieces. Here are our picks for the ten worst movies of 2023. 10. Silent Night John Woo is back in the action space with a film whose conceptual beginnings are full of potential but whose execution left a significant amount to be desired. An entire action movie devoid of dialogue is a cool concept, and with the right care, could have been one of 2023’s most underrated gems. Unfortunately, a lack of character development, poor editing choices, and some woefully underwritten stereotypes of villains rendered Silent Night not only one of the year’s largest wastes of potential, but also of audience’s time (even with a decent one-er action sequence thrown in for good measure). 9. 65 The crux of 65’s premise – that Adam Driver and Ariana Greenblatt are actually members of an alien species that crash landed on earth 65 million years before humanity came to be – is a brilliant one; it’s so brilliant, in fact, that the reveal of this twist in the marketing for the film stings all that much more. Nevertheless, there really could have been something great here, had the script been in any way developed into something resembling an actual story. As it is, 65 is just two hours of these characters being in the same place at the same time while we know as much about them at the end as we did at the beginning. To take a premise like this and not only ruin the twist but then make it boring anyway is a recipe for one of 2023’s most sincere disappointments. 8. The Exorcist: Believer William Freidkin’s The Exorcist is one of the greatest films ever made, full-stop (and might be the greatest horror film ever made if you consider Silence of the Lambs more of a thriller type). So when it was revealed that David Gordon Green, the man behind the Halloween reboot trilogy – of which the last two films were some of the worst of their respective years – would be helming a direct sequel to the 1973 classic, I wasn’t exactly jumping for joy. That said, the trailer was full of all the legacy sequel hallmarks every legacy sequel trailer has: a remixed version of the theme, a return of beloved characters, and a reworked tagline harkening back to the original film. Unfortunately, like the Halloween trilogy before it, Believer not only misunderstands why the original material works, its need for shock value and nostalgia bait crowd cheer moments ends up outright disrespecting the material itself. Ellen Burstyn is utterly wasted in this movie for all the marketing played up her return, and the film’s surprise ending cameo felt cheap and manipulative. The other two films in this new Exorcist trilogy are contractually obligated to be made, unfortunately, so this nightmare won’t be over for a while. 7. Retribution How do you do Speed in 2023? If you’re Retribution, the answer is that you steal the premise and forget all the key moments and plot points that made Speed make sense. Liam Neeson’s non-retirement from action franchises continues to be a thorn in not only his career’s side post-Taken, but all of our sides as well since they keep making just enough money that he keeps making more of them. And yet, somehow, they just keep getting worse…and worse…and worse. I really hope that his claim of retiring from action filmmaking and getting back to his dramatic roots comes to fruition soon, cause there’s not much more of this I can take. 6. Love Again This is a bad movie in so many of the ways movies like it are bad movies, so that’s why it’s not as high on the list as some of the others, but if wasted potential wasn’t such a potent problem in this calendar year, it would most certainly be higher. A Celine Dion vanity project to advertise her new song, poorly disguised as a terribly executed story about love and grief, Love Again was sincerely one of the worst movies I saw this year, and if it wasn’t the most interesting character in the whole movie dying in its first five minutes cluing me in to that fact, the insane Skittles advertisements in the middle of otherwise rudimentary scenes would have. I really hope Priyanka Chopra Jonas’ agent starts believing more in her potential as an actress, because between this and Citadel, the year’s entertainment media has not been kind to her. 5. Ghosted With the rise of A.I. in the film world, and especially in the wake of this summer’s WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes, it seems unfairly insulting to insinuate that Ghosted could have been written by ChatGPT, but when the final product is this generic and seemingly driven by algorithms, it’s difficult not to feel that way despite oneself. Pitching itself as a sort of spy thriller rom-com, this film not only wastes the talents of Ana de Armas and Chris Evans but sucks any chemistry they otherwise might have had right out of the room (and that’s saying something, cause they have chemistry in Knives Out). Truth be told, I don’t even actually remember what the plot of the movie is; I just know I don’t wanna watch it again. 4. Spinning Gold The story of Casablanca records, the label who signed Kiss and some other prominent acts, could have been an interesting one if it wasn’t so obsessed with itself to the point of parody. But like any over-indulged musical act, it just keeps going well past the point of comfort, all the while thinking that the real problem with its performance is the audience being subjected to it. Irreversibly miscast, cheap-looking, and filled with high school community stage-theater level dialogue, it embodies the exact opposite of the “show, don’t tell” rule of filmmaking, and I hated every minute of it. Jeremy Jordan, you deserve so much better. 3. Sweetwater If Spinning Gold is overindulgent towards record execs, Sweetwater takes that concept and applies it to the white guys who made sure Nat “Sweetwater” Clifton became a huge NBA star. White savior movies are still all the rage in cinema if you know where to look, but this one isn’t even well-made from a technical standpoint, and the writing verges on parody levels of that kind of storytelling. It constantly goes out of its way to demonstrate how the white coaches and owners of the teams went above and beyond to make Sweetwater the first Black star of basketball, but never once indulges the audience with a show of skill from the titular star himself or seeks to get to know him in any sincere way. I sincerely hope this is the beginning of the end for the white savior narrative biopic, because if they’re this poorly rendered all the time (and keep losing money), they’ll stop. 2) Nefarious What looked like it could have been an interesting – if somewhat rote – film (is this guy insane or possessed?) quickly turned into lazy right-wing propaganda and evangelical posturing the moment the topic of abortion was brought up in the second act. Up to then, the film wasn’t exactly terrible, but it wasn’t attention-grabbing either. Afterwards, it actually goes so far as to insinuate its protagonist was going to murder someone due to possession, but the performances and direction are so poor that it would be obvious to anyone who could spot a grifter that the protagonist just picked up a weapon under the guise of possession so he could go on a fake Glenn Beck talk show a year later, turn his “experience” into a book, and profit. (This is all notwithstanding the fact that the supposed demon’s name is actually just “Nefarious.”) For a moment there, it seemed as if this film was actually trying something interesting; how sad that any intrigue was squashed so quickly. 1. Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey Even worse than lazy right-wing propaganda, even more annoying than movies that are over-obsessed with themselves, and even more miserable an experience than movies that misunderstand their source material while trying to take advantage of it in the same genre space…are movies like Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey. Full disclosure: I wasn’t against the idea of this movie when it was first revealed; after all, any concept can be made into a great film, regardless of how odd the premise is initially – you just need the right story, craftsmanship, and care put into the making of it. Even when the trailers began dropping for it, the idea of Blood and Honey being so bad it’s good, as a sort of unintentional comedy, got me excited to sit in a room with a bunch of people to laugh and cheer at how dumb it was going to be. What a shame then, that the movie isn’t even so bad, it’s good. It’s just a miserably bad, lazily-crafted experience with poor characters, poor dialogue, some truly terrible effects, overlong sequences that go nowhere, stupid characters that are only stupid so the plot can happen, terrible production design, worse costuming, poor makeup, and not even one minute of enjoyable slasher absurdism. Unfortunately, it made money, so it looks like we’re getting a sequel. God help us all. And those are our picks for the Top 10 Worst Movies of 2023! What were some 2023 movies you saw and hated? Let us know in the comments section below, and thanks for reading! - The Friendly Film Fan Dishonorable Mentions:
by Jacob Thomas Jones Each year, there are any number of films that inspire moviegoers to engage in conversation immediately after exiting the theater due to the innate need to share in the experience of what was just seen. You simply have to talk about certain moments, whether they were shocking, heartwarming, profound, awe-inducing, or just plain fun. Sometimes they’re all five, sometimes they’re one or a few combined. In any case, these moments can make our jaws drop, make us laugh, make us think, or give us a catharsis we didn’t even know we were waiting for. 2023’s movies were full of these moments, so many of them that whittling the list down to just five of them has been one of our toughest but most rewarding list-making tasks. A few notes before we begin: these are only the best individual movie moments of the year, so films we loved that stay consistently great all the way through, rather than having standout individual moments, are not included here. In kind, some films that appear on this list may not end up making it to our Top 10 Movies of the Year. But that’s the beauty of lists like these; they give us a chance to highlight films we may not otherwise get a chance to praise in such effusive terms, and ultimately, they offer us an opportunity to re-live, reflect upon, and re-immortalize some of the cinematic year’s greatest hits. Here are our picks for the Top 5 Scenes & Movie Moments of 2023! (Needless to say: heavy spoilers apply.) 5. Ginza – Godzilla Minus One Godzilla Minus One is already off to a hell of a start by the time the titular monster reaches the Japanese city of Ginza, the horrors of the enormous Kaiju’s rampage readily apparent to the viewer. It’s once he reaches that place, however, that Takashi Yamazaki’s film kicks into its highest gear, with the monster taking on the form of a great natural disaster as he wrecks everything around him, reducing the city to rubble, crumbling train cars in his jaws, and rendering the city streets craters as he stomps along. And then came the moment in which every viewer’s jaw hit the floor: the atomic breath. We’ve seen Godzilla’s atomic breath in movies before – 2014’s American Godzilla film features a quite famous moment where the Kaiju defeats another monster using it – but rarely have we seen it rendered this terrifyingly. The dorsal fins begin to protrude from Godzilla’s back, the blue glow illuminating them like a timer, and once he’s all charged up, the soundscape is entirely filled by the audio of what these characters call the “heat ray” being unleashed, which in turn unleashes an atomic explosion, wiping nearly everything out for miles around. As the camera takes a low angle, we witness the majesty of Godzilla as he roars into the sky; he has become the embodiment of nuclear terror. 4. I’m Just Ken – Barbie There are a few different moments from Barbie that could have made this list, but at the end of the day, it’s this showstopping musical dance number in the film’s third act that takes the cake. I’m Just Ken isn’t just lyrically innovative and riotously fun, it also gives the audience further insight into Ken’s frame of mind; plus, every background actor is giving everything to the audience frame by frame. If you look, you’ll notice details that you never noticed before. This is all before the dream ballet dance sequence begins, which may be the best part of the whole thing. The stage is gorgeous, the choreography is iconic, and the conclusion to it all is extremely cathartic. (Look at Kingsley Ben-Adir during the dream ballet’s final chorus – it’s a real treat.) And it’s all led by a stellar turn from Ryan Gosling, who we all knew could do comedy and could sing, but leave it to Greta Gerwig to pull the ingenious move of putting those talents together in one fantastic brush stroke. 3. Finale – Killers of the Flower Moon (There were no actual images of the scene in question available, so I had to use a regular still.) Perhaps the single most powerful conclusion to any film released in 2023, Killers of the Flower Moon sees Martin Scorsese confronting head-on his own complicity in not fully telling this story by concluding that he can’t fully tell this story – after all, he’s not Osage, and it would take a member of the Osage nation to sufficiently fill in the gaps Scorsese is unable to fully understand. Additionally, the film critiques the very idea of itself as a form of entertainment for mass audiences by criticizing the idea of large-scale crimes which have affected entire generations of people being turned into the true-crime tales we obsess over day after day. How complicit are we in trivializing real pain when these events and other atrocities become the entertainment we so desperately cling to? And how can we hope to rise above these issues if even those who seek to understand them cannot tell the full story? To read my words on it, one wouldn’t be able to get a full picture of just how powerful the ending is, but when seen through one’s own eyes, it’s one of the most profound self-criticizing moments in any big director’s recent filmography. How lucky we are that Martin Scorsese is still seeking to educate, and to learn, this deep into his wonderfully storied career. 2. Trinity – Oppenheimer Sometimes a great movie moment doesn’t have one individual thing making it great, but a whole host of different tools and history coming together to wow the audience with a showstopping sequence demonstrating the full power of a filmmaker’s capabilities. Christopher Nolan’s directorial vision is on full display in Oppenheimer, but nowhere does everything coalesce better than in the crescendo that is the Trinity Test. Even with the knowledge of history to back it up, Trinity is a masterfully-edited, brilliantly-scored, and perfectly-acted sequence in which our characters wait with bated breath to discover whether or not their atomic bomb will detonate, changing the world and everyone’s lives for the rest of eternity, whether all their work will be for nothing and they’re about to fire a dud…or whether, upon detonation, it will ignite the atmosphere, ending humanity as we know it. From the moment boots are on the ground to the sound dropping out when the bomb explodes to the second Kitty receives a phone call telling her they’ve succeeded in their quest, we are white-knuckled with anticipation, ready to witness history but knowing the horror it will leave in its wake. It’s a moment so arresting, it literally shakes the foundations of cinema. 1. Ely Cathedral – Maestro Despite the fact that Bradley Cooper’s sophomore directorial effort has become film twitter’s favorite movie to hate for awards season (a notion I thoroughly disagree with and do not share in), there remains one scene, one moment in the whole of film in 2023 that takes everyone’s breath away the minute it begins and refuses to give it back until the six minutes have passed: the Ely Cathedral sequence. Up to this moment, Leonard Bernstein has languished in toil, his life unable to fulfill him, his work unable to make up the gaps in his heart, and his delicate marriage to Felicia teetering on the edge of calamity. It’s difficult for him to hold on to the life he so loves; yet, when he gets in front of an orchestra, everything else falls away, and we are treated to an awe-inspiring groundswell of magnificent performance, direction, cinematography, and sound design. Cooper spends a full six minutes live-conducting the London Symphony Orchestra through Mahler’s “Symphony No. 2 in C Minor ‘Resurrection’,” his performance and the film itself reaching their ultimate crescendo as he and his baton navigate through every note with such passion it would take a stone heart not to be moved in some way. It’s impossible to describe just how arresting this moment is without one experiencing it for oneself, but in seeing Maestro in a Dolby Atmos-equipped theater, the effect was soul-shaking, a completely transportive, unforgettable, and riveting soundscape surrounding and driven by one of the year’s most spectacularly worthy efforts. I still love Maestro for all the supposed flaws it contains, and the Ely Cathedral sequence remains without question the singular best movie moment of 2023. And those are our picks for the Top 5 Scenes and Movie Moments of 2023! What were some of your favorite moments in movies this year? Let us know in the comments section below, and thanks for reading! - The Friendly Film Fan Honorable Mentions:
by Jacob Thomas Jones Each year, there are any number of movies that fly under the radar for general audiences, whether due to smaller release plans by the studios themselves, release dates that clash with larger movies in the culture at the time, or simply a lack of staying power during their theatrical runs. More often than not, these films will have a decent number of critics and audiences leaving positive reviews, but rarely are they re-considered, re-watched, or re-evaluated in the minds of movie lovers. With all that in mind, we at The Friendly Film Fan believe firmly in giving movies their due which we feel may have been overlooked, underseen, or as the case may be, underappreciated. These are our picks for the Top 10 Most Underrated Movies of 2023. 10. Sharper While Sharper remains a flawed film by no stretch of the imagination, it seems as though audiences haven’t quite grown to appreciate properly what it actually manages to pull off. A solid mid-budget script about a con artist targeting the billionaires of Manhattan with a lot of moving parts and an ensemble this big is bound to take a few missteps, but on the whole, the film remains a fun ride, complete with one of Justice Smith’s better turns in front of the camera and supporting performances filled with some of our great character actors. It’s imperfect, yes, but this one deserves another look. 9. Missing A surprise pseudo-sequel to 2018’s highly underappreciated Searching, this film stars Storm Reid as a young girl whose mother goes missing (cue Leo meme) while on a trip to Colombia. Much like its predecessor, the film is entirely told through digital screen technology – laptops, ring cameras, text chains, calendar notifications, etc. It’s rare enough to make a screen-based movie that works as well as Searching does, but to do it twice is a real feat. What ultimately sets Missing apart – without spoiling anything – is that it’s less straightforward than this series’ previous entry while still boasting the same spirit and tonal consistency of the story. There are actually a few twists in the film that one doesn’t expect, and it elevates the film beyond the idea of “let’s just do that again.” While it doesn’t quite have the same impact as Searching due to the lack of novelty in its filmmaking and one or two scenes that don’t land as well, Missing is a genuinely good missing persons thriller, and is well worth your time. 8. Polite Society The most recent of the films on this list that I’ve seen (thanks in part to Barack Obama’s year-end movies list – keep ‘em coming, Mr. President), Polite Society is one of the more bizarre offerings featured among this pack. A film about a Pakistani girl who dreams of being a stuntwoman having to put her skills to use when it seems that a matchmaking family has nefarious plans in store for her older sister does sound like a fun time, but it’s the stylistic flourishes and fantastic costume design that set this one apart. Although its third act reaches for a level of absurdity at some points that makes it more comical than compelling, the terrifically fun performances – especially that of our lead Priya Kansara – as well as the first half’s quite solid stunt work and unexpected plot development, keep Polite Society singing well past the point where lesser films would have settled for simply entertaining audiences in a more conventional manner. 7. Flora and Son John Carney remains one of film’s most unsung heroes, an artist whose movies are filled with complicated families and hearts too big for the viewer not to feel something by their end. While it doesn’t quite reach the heights of Sing Street, this new entry in his filmography about a woman whose family life is complex to say the least has just as much heart as anything released in 2023, as well as one of the year’s most underrated turns by Eve Hewson (plus a return to films by the Joseph Gordon-Levitt). And of course, as with every John Carney project, it brings with it some very catchy new music. 6. You Hurt My Feelings A smaller release this year from A24, You Hurt My Feelings finds Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ betrayed and heartbroken after she overhears her husband (played by the always solid Tobias Menzies) telling his friend that he doesn’t like her latest book, despite having told her earlier that he did. As much a film about how we cling to others opinions of ourselves as it is about the lies we tell others in order to “keep the peace,” so to speak, the movie charts how this idea affects relationships, self-confidence, self-doubt, and whether or not protecting feelings is worse than telling a truth that hurts them. There’s no grand revelation here, and no easy answers, but in navigating the issue with delicacy and grace, writer-director Nicole Holofcener forges one of 2023’s most endearing journeys in film. 5. The Covenant The second of two Guy Ritchie films released in 2023, The Covenant finds the director operating slightly outside his usual wheelhouse; lucky for us, his care in bringing this story to life means that it can live on for the rest of the world to see. When an American soldier is trapped in Afghanistan, his interpreter (played in a show-stealing performance by Dar Salim) risks his own life to carry him to safety across miles of dangerous terrain occupied by the Taliban. Putting aside the fact that Jake Gyllenhaal just works in a soldier’s part and always will, what ultimately makes the movie worthwhile is just how straightforward it is. There’s a grander point here, yes, about the frustration Gyllenhaal’s character feels regarding even being in Afghanistan and needing to rescue Ahmed so that he can do one good thing to make it all feel worth it, but it’s icing on the cake, not the cake itself. The meat of the story is in the telling of it, and it’s frankly pretty great that we’re still getting mid-budget movies like this one every once in a while. 4. Chevalier Terrific costume design and a star lead performance by Kelvin Harrison Jr. as Joseph Bologne Chevalier de Saint Georges keep this one afloat just enough to make this list, as well as a show-stopping opening sequence wherein Harrison Jr. plays the violin in an instrumental dual and a final 5 minutes as thrilling as any other film released this year. One of the truly remarkable untold true stories about a Black man rising through the ranks of France’s most esteemed persons, Joseph Bologne was a master of the bow, the baton, and the sword, eventually helping to fund the revolution in France which would claim the life of his one-time friend Marie Antoinette. It’s been a sufficiently long time since I’ve seen this one, so pardon my lack of memory regarding its more detailed elements, but if period piece deserves more attention than it’s been given, it’s this one. 3. Knock at the Cabin M. Night Shyamalan movies are truly a test of just how much audiences are willing to buy into, but even with his penchant for twists and turns, Knock at the Cabin ends up being one of his most straightforward films to date. Following the disaster that was Old, Shyamalan returns to a more grounded style of filmmaking, following a group of four people who must convince a family staying in a remote cabin to choose someone from within their ranks to die in order to prevent the apocalypse. The tension present in this film is some of the best in any Shyamalan project, but what sets it apart is its lead performance, an exercise in anguish and empathy from Dave Bautista that may rank as the former wrestler turned actor’s greatest on-camera work to date. We all know and love him as Drax from the Guardians of the Galaxy films, but outside of the Marvel machine, Bautista has quietly become one of the best character actors working in the business, and this film has all the evidence to back up that argument. 2. Thanksgiving I don’t think people appreciate enough just how good Eli Roth’s adaptation of a fake trailer from Grindhouse turned out to be. A sort of Scream-like birth of a new horror franchise has emerged, and with how fun the performances and kills are in this one, I wouldn’t be surprised if we get more holiday-themed horror from Roth as the years go on. After a Black Friday disaster claims the life of one of Plymouth’s citizens, a masked serial killer begins terrorizing those who seem responsible one year later, and with so many people involved in the tragedy, the killer could be any one of them. Thanksgiving is no masterpiece, sure, and the over-the-top performances of some of the side characters can get a little laughable, but on the whole, it’s a deliciously pulpy, bloody B-movie good time that will have slasher fans satisfied by the time it hits the credits. 1. Jules Perhaps the single most underseen movie released in theaters in 2023, Jules played at my local theater for about a week or so and then was gone before anyone even remembered it was there. A small, heartfelt comedy about an alien that crash-lands in Ben Kingsley’s backyard, the film’s heart, and some of its absurdist sequences (one in particular about dead cats) render it a cut above other films operating in the same space. Ben Kingsley’s performance is of course well-suited to this sort of story, but it’s the richness of the side characters involved that makes it one of the year’s most underrated works. If you happen to come across it on streaming, go ahead and give it a watch. At the very least, it’s a worthwhile way to spend an afternoon. And those are our picks for the Top 10 Most Underrated Movies of 2023! Are there any movies you feel were underappreciated this year? Shout them out in our comments section, and thanks for reading! - The Friendly Film Fan Honorable Mentions:
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AuthorFilm critic in my free time. Film enthusiast in my down time. Categories
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